Truly this will go down in history as THE worst poll. Until the next one.

Not only does it make no sense and show about 3 minutes of thought, but it's also hilariously, almost autistically, insensitive. I can only figure that they were trying to spark some kind of discussion about radiation measurement systems, like this was an episode of xkcd or something. This is easily the laziest news publication that anyone takes even halfway seriously.

They have a tremendous and valuable readership and a brand name, and their work is of lower quality than second rate blogs about reality tv. Lazy, lazy, lazy lazy. It's been fun, guys. Been here since high school; you can take this 5 digit ID and shove it.

1. Possible, though I doubt that's the primary reason. I could be wrong.2. Unlikely. Phillips head screws are far more numerous and widely manufactured, it's unlikely that an unusual screw that only comes from one or two suppliers will be that much cheaper.3. I think Apple is too big of a fish to be playing nepotism with a screw supplier.4. That's what the void clause of the warranty is for.5. Funny.

6. Apple has a history of tightly controlling the way their products are used, are fundamentally opposed to openness, and have long screwed aftermarket service providers.

There are a few unjust and unreasonable laws in America (hellllooooo drug war!) but normal safety regulations (even those of the obnoxious TSA) are not those. I know we're supposed to be a nation of fearless individualists waving our guns and protecting our property from the hordes of Others, but managing the safety of hundreds or even thousands of people in a tight situation with the occasional need for rapid response to sudden problems is complicated and involves everyone showing a little team spirit and just doing what the people in uniform say.

What does it say about a person if they can't turn off their toy for 10 minutes to follow official directions that do in fact save lives every single year. Your iPod isn't more important than safety, no matter how much of an invincibility illusion you maintain.

A whoooole lot of the market is conservative, old, never reads tech news, and has very limited interest in apps. The people who line up at 4:00 AM are good press, but they don't actually count any more than any other consumer.

Blackberry has a market that is wary of switching. If they're smart they should be able to survive and grow.

Myspace had a bunch of teenagers. Facebook has managed to actually attract working semi-tech-literate adults to use their gee-whiz web 2.0 service. They're basically the only company that has done that. It will be very hard to move their entire network effect onto a competing service.